ABSTRACT

Originally published in 1904. The following 'Notes' were not penned in the presumptuous hope of adding materially to the existing knowledge of the subjects with which they deal. The first part of this book was the result of much reading, while the account of the author's various experiences at the Chinese Court were undertaken with a view to faithfully putting on record the manner of those receptions in which, after so long and rigorous a seclusion, the reigning Son of Heaven and his Imperial Mother at last condescended (driven no doubt by foreign pressure) to put aside the veil which for centuries had shrouded the faces of majesty in China.

part |167 pages

Part I

chapter |13 pages

The Early History of China

chapter |8 pages

China in the Middle Ages

chapter |26 pages

China under the Manchus

chapter |42 pages

The Reign of Kwang-Hsü

chapter |7 pages

Confucianism

chapter |12 pages

Taoism

chapter |11 pages

Buddhism

chapter |9 pages

The Chinese Language

chapter |15 pages

Concerning the Classics

chapter |13 pages

How China Is Governed

part

Part II

chapter |8 pages

First Acquaintances

chapter |27 pages

Shanghai

chapter |10 pages

Up the Yangtse River

chapter |21 pages

In the Gorges and Rapids

chapter |29 pages

Peking

chapter |24 pages

The Dragon Throne

chapter |10 pages

Court Ladies

chapter |26 pages

Imperial Mausolea

chapter

In Conclusion